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14.07.2023 - 09:51 / dailyrecord.co.uk
A pet trainer has explained the do's and don'ts when it comes to training your puppy at a young age.
Training a brand new pet can be challenging, especially if they have a lot of energy to burn off. Excitable puppies that are teething can be a lot of work, and they can be confused about what they can bite.
They can nibble on fingers, which can be not too much of a problem at first - but it can be more painful when they get older. So, a pet trainer has thankfully come to the rescue and explained when it comes to teaching your puppy not to bite.
If you don't teach your dog what is right and wrong to begin with for biting, you may end up getting injured later on as the puppy gets bigger.
TikTok account @utahdoodles has posted a video to their 310,600 followers about what to do when your puppy wants to bite down on something.
The account began by saying: "Don't give them chew toys while training. Puppies can't differentiate what they can and cannot chew."
Chew toys are a common thing for people to use to distract dogs, but it is maybe better to get an alternative when they are extremely young.
They continued: "Do give them an ice cube. It's fun for them to chew and will soothe their gums."
An ice cube is a great alternative to a chew toy, as it will help soothe the puppies pain, and is also a fun activity for them to play with.
The experts added: "Don't get mad or give out a negative reaction. Do use grab technique. Gently place finger over and under muzzle.
"It's uncomfortable but doesn't hurt and lets puppy know they should stop."
There's lots of advice on the internet about training puppies during that awkward biting phase, as the ASPCA said: "Either ignore him for 10 to 20 seconds or, if he starts mouthing on you again, get up and
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Daniel D'Addario Chief TV Critic In my earliest years, the evening didn’t end until Vanna White said good night. I was in one of the parts of America where “Wheel of Fortune” comes on after “Jeopardy!” (the only proper order — a roughage-filled meal, then dessert). And I’d insist on staying up past the last ad break to hear the chat between White and “Wheel” host Pat Sajak for 45 seconds or so, wrapping on a sincere-sounding sendoff that gave me the all-clear to trundle up the stairs. Why did I have to wait for the last moments with Vanna? Well, part of it was a child’s literalism: she hadn’t said good night, so it wasn’t yet that time. But part, too, was an attempt to wring out every last moment of White’s particular charm from “Wheel’s” half-hour. White — perhaps even more than Sajak, a consummate emcee of the old school — seemed to represent in one person what “Wheel” was all about. A model for an endless array of spectacular gowns and an ornament on a show whose gameplay didn’t strictly require a letter-turner as technology improved, she represented all the glamour and luxurious promise of cash prizes, free vacations and the gilded sunlight of California. And yet presenting in complete earnest, from her glee or sorrow for a contestant who won the game or who bought the wrong vowel to her utter commitment to trading pleasantries with Sajak, she was a fabulous contradiction — a quintessentially middle-American celebrity.